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Predicting Audience’s Response from Sketch Comedy and Crosstalk Scripts (A Corpus Supporting Comedy Writers)

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Supporting Comedy Writers: Predicting Audience’s Response from Sketch Comedy and Crosstalk Scripts

We would like to express our sincere appreciation to all comedians and backstage teams for their hard work to make audiences happy!

Paper: link

NLP for Comedy Scripts

Datasets

Raw Data - Without Annotations

30 items - Each item is a *.txt file of a performance.

Each file has following content:

Actor A:...

Actor B: ...

Actor A: ...

Actor C: ...

Annotated Data

* Paper Experiments Data

This folder contains the data split used for our experiments described in the paper. If you would like to run experiments in order to compare the results to that of the paper, I would recommend using the data splits in this folder. However, if you just would like to use this data to do something for fun or other things, you can also choose the data in other formats (i.e., CONLL, JSON formats). :)

There are two sub-folders inside: Classification and Information Extraction.

In Classification, the format of each file (i.e., script of each performance) is as follows:

1 Actor A: ...

0 Actor B: ...

1 Actor A: ...

...

Therefore, this is actually a binary sentence classification problem. 1 indicates the audience laughed on this sentence, 0 the audience not.

In Information Extraction, the format of each file is:

Actor A : word1 word2 word3 O O O B-Happy I-Happy

* CONLL-Format

Each file has following content:

word1 O

word2 O

word3 B-Happy

word4 I-Happy

word5 O

...

* JSON-Format (There are 2 types of json and choose the one you like)

*.json1
{
   "id":12, # sentence id, you can ignore this field
   "text":"文松:太神奇了,我踩你腰了,那我怎么一点感觉都没有啊。",
   "meta":{ # you can ignore this field
      
   },
   "annotation_approver":null, # you can ignore this field
   "labels":[ 
      [
         18, # start index
         26, # end index
         "Happy" # class
      ]
   ]
}
*.json
{
   "id":12, # sentence id, you can ignore this field
   "text":"文松:太神奇了,我踩你腰了,那我怎么一点感觉都没有啊。",
   "annotations":[
      {
         "label":1,
         "start_offset":18,
         "end_offset":26,
         "user":1 # you can ignore this field
      }
   ],
   "meta":{ # you can ignore this field
      
   },
   "annotation_approver":null # you can ignore this field
}

Code

Classification Baselines

Information Extraction Baselines

This is the command I used for bert mdoels. (You can also find how to use these bert models in official documents. I just put what I used here in case it may help you to more quickly set up the running experiments)

! python3 run_ner.py --pretrained_model_path models/mixed_large_bert_tiny_model.bin --config_path models/bert_tiny_config.json --vocab_path models/google_zh_vocab.txt \
                   --train_path 0.train.uer --dev_path 0.test.uer --test_path 0.test.uer \
                   --epochs_num 5 --batch_size 16 --encoder bert

!Note: The information extraction evaluation used relax-match precision, recall and f-scores. Please find more information in the paper.

Citation

@inproceedings{li-2020-supporting,
    title = "Supporting Comedy Writers: Predicting Audience{'}s Response from Sketch Comedy and Crosstalk Scripts",
    author = "Li, Maolin",
    booktitle = "Proceedings of the First Workshop on Computational Approaches to Discourse",
    month = nov,
    year = "2020",
    address = "Online",
    publisher = "Association for Computational Linguistics",
    url = "https://www.aclweb.org/anthology/2020.codi-1.5",
    pages = "42--52",
    abstract = "Sketch comedy and crosstalk are two popular types of comedy. They can relieve people{'}s stress and thus benefit their mental health, especially when performances and scripts are high-quality. However, writing a script is time-consuming and its quality is difficult to achieve. In order to minimise the time and effort needed for producing an excellent script, we explore ways of predicting the audience{'}s response from the comedy scripts. For this task, we present a corpus of annotated scripts from popular television entertainment programmes in recent years. Annotations include a) text classification labels, indicating which actor{'}s lines made the studio audience laugh; b) information extraction labels, i.e. the text spans that made the audience laughed immediately after the performers said them. The corpus will also be useful for dialogue systems and discourse analysis, since our annotations are based on entire scripts. In addition, we evaluate different baseline algorithms. Experimental results demonstrate that BERT models can achieve the best predictions among all the baseline methods. Furthermore, we conduct an error analysis and investigate predictions across scripts with different styles.",
}

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